280 likes | 454 Views
Limit and Derivative Review. For many functions. ...and many values of a , it is true that And it is usually apparent when this is not true. "Interesting" things happen when f ( a ) is not well-defined, or there is something "singular" about f at a. Top ten famous limits:. 1. 2.
E N D
For many functions... ...and many values of a, it is true that And it is usually apparent when this is not true. "Interesting" things happen when f(a) is not well-defined, or there is something "singular" about f at a.
Top ten famous limits: 1. 2.
3. (A) If 0 < x < 1 then (B) If x > 1, then 4. and 5. and
6-10 6. For any value of n, and for any positive value of n, 7. does not exist!
8. 9. 10. If f is differentiable at a, then
Basic properties of limits I.Arithmetic of limits: If both and exist, then and if , then
II. Two-sided and one-sided limits: III. Monotonicity:
Let’s try one... A. 0 B. C. -1/2 D. E. -1 F. G. -2 H.
Continuity A function f is continuous atx = a if it is true that (The existence of both the limit and of f(a) is implicit here). Functions that are continuous at every point of an interval are called "continuous on the interval".
Intermediate value theorem The most important property of continuous functions is the "common sense" Intermediate Value Theorem: Suppose f is continuous on the interval [a,b], and f(a) = m, and f(b) = M, with m < M. Then for any number p between m and M, there is a solution in [a,b] of the equation f(x) = p.
Application of the intermediate-value theorem Maple graph Since f(0)=-2 and f(2)=+2, there must be a root of f(x)=0 in between x=0 and x=2. A naive way to look for it is the "bisection method" -- try the number halfway between the two closest places you know of where f has opposite signs.
We know that f(0) = -2 and f(2) = 2, so there is a root in between. Choose the halfway point, x = 1. Since f(1) = -3 < 0, we now know (of course, we already knew from the graph) that there is a root between 1 and 2. So try halfway between again: f(1.5) = -1.625 So the root is between 1.5 and 2. Try 1.75: f(1.75) = -.140625 So the root is between 1.75 and 2. Try the average, x = 1.875 f(1.875) = .841796875 f is positive here, so the root is between 1.75 and 1.875.
Derivatives Derivatives give a comparison between the rates of change of two variables: When x changes by so much, then y changes by so much. Definition of derivative:
Common derivative formulas: Let’s do some examples…..
Derivative question #1 Find the equation of a line tangent to at the point (4,2). A. 6x+y=26 B. 4x+2y=20 C. 3x-4y=4 D. 7x+18y=64 E. 5x+21y=62 F. 4x+15y=46 G. 3x+16y=44 H. 2x-y=6
Derivative question #2 Calculate if
Derivative question #3 Where is the function concave upward?
Discussion Here is the graph of a function. Draw a graph of its derivative.
The meaning and uses of derivatives, in particular: • (a) The idea of linear approximation • (b) How second derivatives are related to quadratic functions • (c) Together, these two ideas help to solve max/min problems
Linear functions • Linear functions occur in calculus as differential approximations to more complicated functions • f(x) = f(a) + f '(a) (x-a) (approximately)
Review - max and min problems Also, by way of review, recall that to find the maximum and minimum values of a function on any interval, we should look at three kinds of points: 1. The critical points of the function. These are the points where the derivative of the function is equal to zero. 2. The places where the derivative of the function fails to exist (sometimes these are called critical points,too). 3. The endpoints of the interval. If the interval is unbounded, this means paying attention to
Position, velocity, and acceleration: You know that if y = f(t) represents the position of an object moving along a line, the v = f '(t) is its velocity, and a = f "(t) is its acceleration. Example: For falling objects, y = is the height of the object at time t, where is the initial height (at time t=0), and is its initial velocity.
Related Rates Recall how related rates work. This is one of the big ideas that makes calculus important: If you know how z changes when y changes (dz/dy) and how y changes when x changes (dy/dx), then you know how z changes when x changes: Remember the idea of implicit differentiation: The derivative of f(y) with respect to x is f '(y) dzdzdy dxdydx = dy dx
More on related rates The idea is that "differentiating both sides of an equation with respect to x" [or any other variable] is a legal (and useful!) operation. This is best done by using examples...
Related Rates Greatest Hits A light is at the top of a 16-ft pole. A boy 5 ft tall walks away from the pole at a rate of 4 ft/sec. At what rate is the tip of his shadow moving when he is 18 ft from the pole? At what rate is the length of his shadow increasing? A man on a dock is pulling in a boat by means of a rope attached to the bow of the boat 1 ft above the water level and passing through a simple pulley located on the dock 8 ft above water level. If he pulls in the rope at a rate of 2 ft/sec, how fast is the boat approaching the dock when the bow of the boat is 25 ft from a point on the water directly below the pulley?
Greatest Hits... A weather balloon is rising vertically at a rate of 2 ft/sec. An observer is situated 100 yds from a point on the ground directly below the balloon. At what rate is the distance between the balloon and the observer changing when the altitude of the balloon is 500 ft? The ends of a water trough 8 ft long are equilateral triangles whose sides are 2 ft long. If water is being pumped into the trough at a rate of 5 cu ft/min, find the rate at which the water level is rising when the depth is 8 in. Gas is escaping from a spherical balloon at a rate of 10 cu ft/hr. At what rate is the radius chaing when the volume is 400 cu ft?